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The din of war increases: I climb the roof and watch, like a shepherd on a rock at the sound of fire or flood. The fire rises: I seize arms (Sidgwick).

298:dīversō: “in all directions,” “in various regions” (Carter). Note the word’s emphatic position (H-H); “disturbed by many mingled sounds of grief” (G-K). miscentur moenia luctū: Vergil is fond of using misceō of any sort of “confusion” or “trouble” (Sidgwick). Here the city is said to be “confounded,” because “confusion reigns in the city”—“throughout the city with manifold cries of agony confusion reigns” (Page). Moenia, “the city” proper, i.e., all inside the walls (Carter). Luctū, used of the agony during a battle as well as of the grief afterwards for the lost (Conington). magis atque magis: with clārēscunt (301), “louder and louder grow the sounds” (Comstock); “the noises begin to grow clearer and clearer” (H-H).

299–300:sēcrēta…recessit: “stood back apart [from others]” (Comstock), i.e., was in a remote region of the city, apart by itself. It was neither near the shore nor the Scaean gate where the first fighting was (Carter). = quamquam domus parentis Anchīsae recessit (“lay retired”) sēcrēta (“separate, standing apart), obtēctaque arboribus (Chase). obtēcta: “shaded” (Carter). Notice the accumulation of phrase, sēcrēta obtēcta recessit, “though the walls of my sire were hid in still retreat behind a shroud of trees” (Sidgwick).

304–308:in segetem…pastor: a comparison to illustrate Aeneas’ state of mind as he stood on the house-top (Carter);= adstō velutī (cum in segetem…silvās) stupet…pastor: “with ears pricked up I stand, as (when fire falls…or a torrent overwhelms…) the unwitting shepherd is dazed as he hears…” (Page). The comparison instituted is between the bewilderment of Aeneas and of the shepherd, but a further comparison is implied between the din of battle and the sounds of destruction heard by the shepherd (C-R).

307:stupet īnscius: take with velutī (C-R): “stands dazed and perplexed” (Comstock); “stands aghast and bewildered” (Howson), i.e., not comprehending at all (C-R),because he has just been roused by the sound, and is still dazed and ignorant of its cause (Page).

307–308:altō vertice: to harmonize with Aeneas’ position (see line 302) (C-R).

310:Deiphobī: Deiphobus was theson of Priam and Hecuba. After the death of Paris he married Helen (Carter). In 6.494 his ghost meets Aeneas and describes how he was betrayed by his wife at the sack of Troy, and slain and mangled (Sidgwick). His house was the first to be attacked (C-R), drawing the pent-up fury of the Greeks (Pharr). dedit ruīnam:= ruit (Pharr): “fell crashing,” literally “gave a fall” (C-R); “has made” or “caused ruin,” i.e., has fallen in ruin. Vergil and Lucretius are both fond of using dō in the sense of “place” or “make,” which is still found in compounds like abdō “I place apart” and condō “I place together” (Page). Ruīnam is both the fall and the consequences of it (G-K). ampla: Notice how the position of ampla heightens the effect of dedit ruīnam (C-R).

312:proximus Ūcalegōn: = domus Ucalegōnis (Pharr),the name of the owner put for the house (Page): “[the house of] my neighbor Ucalegon” (Comstock). Ūcalegōn, from ούκ۔αλέγων, “Don’t-Care,” a name of strange form and meaning: sounds like a nickname (Sidgwick). Homer (Iliad3.148) mentions Ūcalegōn as a trusted consellor of Priam (Howson). Sīgēa…freta: “the Hellespont” (C-R); Sīgēum was a promontory of the Troad, near the union of the Hellespont and the Aegean Sea (Carter). Map of Troy and environs. ignī…relūcent: “gleam with the blaze” (H-H); ignī, ablative (AG 76b.1) of means (AG 409) (Pharr). lāta: expressive of the vastness of the conflagration (C-R).

313:exoritur: of the third conjugation here (AG 176) (normally it would be fourth conjugation, exorītur); singular because it agrees with the nearest subject (Pharr). clāmorque…clangorque: Note the word play and polysyndeton (AG 640). virum: = vir[ōr]um by syncope; subjective genitive (AG 347) with clāmor (as also armōrum with clangor). tubārum: Vergil touches on a custom of city-sacking; often cities are sacked to the sound of trumpets, as Tullus Hostilius ordered Alba Longa to be sacked (Servius).

315:glomerāre: “to muster” (Comstock), dependent on the sense of “desire” in ardent animi—“my spirit burns to gather together a troop for war” (Page); bellō: dative of purpose (AG 382) (Carter); in prose = ad bellum (C-R). in arcem: the citadel as a rallying-point in his first thought (Conington).

fastīgium, iī, n.: that which is carried to a point or apex; the apex or point of a pediment; a gable, upper part of a house; roof, pinnacle, battlement, 2.444; slope of a trench; (fig.), chief point, 1.342. (fastīgō)